Increasing the world’s knowledge one blog at a time

Main menu

Monthly Archives: August 2009

This tutorial describes how to set up database replication in MySQL. MySQL replication allows you to have an exact copy of a database from a master server on another server (slave), and all updates to the database on the master server are immediately replicated to the database on the slave server so that both databases are in sync. This is not a backup policy because an accidentally issued DELETE command will also be carried out on the slave; but replication can help protect against hardware failures though.

In this tutorial I will show how to replicate the database exampledb from the master with the IP address 192.168.0.100 to a slave. Both systems (master and slave) are running Debian Sarge; however, the configuration should apply to almost all distributions with little or no modification.

Both systems have MySQL installed, and the database exampledb with tables and data is already existing on the master, but not on the slave.

I want to say first that this is not the only way of setting up such a system. There are many ways of achieving this goal but this is the way I take. I do not issue any guarantee that this will work for you!

1 Configure The Master

First we have to edit /etc/mysql/my.cnf. We have to enable networking for MySQL, and MySQL should listen on all IP addresses, therefore we comment out these lines (if existant):

#skip-networking
#bind-address = 127.0.0.1

Furthermore we have to tell MySQL for which database it should write logs (these logs are used by the slave to see what has changed on the master), which log file it should use, and we have to specify that this MySQL server is the master. We want to replicate the database exampledb, so we put the following lines into /etc/mysql/my.cnf:

There are two possibilities to get the existing tables and data from exampledb from the master to the slave. The first one is to make a database dump, the second one is to use theLOAD DATA FROM MASTER;command on the slave. The latter has the disadvantage the the database on the master will be locked during this operation, so if you have a large database on a high-traffic production system, this is not what you want, and I recommend to follow the first method in this case. However, the latter method is very fast, so I will describe both here.

This will create an SQL dump of exampledb in the file exampledb.sql. Transfer this file to your slave server!

If you want to go the LOAD DATA FROM MASTER; way then there is nothing you must do right now.

Finally we have to unlock the tables in exampledb:

mysql -u root -p
Enter password:
UNLOCK TABLES;
quit;

Now the configuration on the master is finished. On to the slave…

2 Configure The Slave

On the slave we first have to create the database exampledb:

mysql -u root -p
Enter password:
CREATE DATABASE exampledb;
quit;

If you have made an SQL dump of exampledb on the master and have transferred it to the slave, then it is time now to import the SQL dump into our newly created exampledb on the slave:

mysql -u root -p<password> exampledb < /path/to/exampledb.sql (Replace <password> with the real password for the MySQL user root!Important: There is no space between -p and <password>!)

If you want to go the LOAD DATA FROM MASTER; way then there is nothing you must do right now.

Now we have to tell MySQL on the slave that it is the slave, that the master is 192.168.0.100, and that the master database to watch is exampledb. Therefore we add the following lines to/etc/mysql/my.cnf:

Then we restart MySQL:/etc/init.d/mysql restartIf you have not imported the master exampledb with the help of an SQL dump, but want to go the LOAD DATA FROM MASTER; way, then it is time for you now to get the data from the masterexampledb:mysql -u root -p
Enter password:
LOAD DATA FROM MASTER;
quit;If you have phpMyAdmin installed on the slave you can now check if all tables/data from the master exampledb is also available on the slave exampledb.Finally, we must do this:mysql -u root -p
Enter password:
SLAVE STOP;In the next command (still on the MySQL shell) you have to replace the values appropriately:CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST='192.168.0.100', MASTER_USER='slave_user', MASTER_PASSWORD='<some_password>', MASTER_LOG_FILE='mysql-bin.006', MASTER_LOG_POS=183;

MASTER_HOSTis the IP address or hostname of the master (in this example it is192.168.0.100).

MASTER_USER is the user we granted replication privileges on the master.

MASTER_PASSWORDis the password ofMASTER_USERon the master.

MASTER_LOG_FILEis the file MySQL gave back when you ranSHOW MASTER STATUS;on the master.

MASTER_LOG_POSis the position MySQL gave back when you ranSHOW MASTER STATUS; on the master.

Now all that is left to do is start the slave. Still on the MySQL shell we runSTART SLAVE;
quit;That's it! Now whenever exampledb is updated on the master, all changes will be replicated to exampledb on the slave. Test it!